Low voltage operation of non-volatile flexible OFET memory devices using high- k P(VDF-TrFE) gate dielectric and polyimide charge storage layer

2016 ◽  
Vol 108 ◽  
pp. 39-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mao-Shen Lu ◽  
Hung-Chin Wu ◽  
Yu-Wei Lin ◽  
Mitsuru Ueda ◽  
Wen-Chang Chen



2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (38) ◽  
pp. 9838-9842 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bo-Yi Jiang ◽  
Sureshraju Vegiraju ◽  
Anthony Shiaw-Tseh Chiang ◽  
Ming-Chou Chen ◽  
Cheng-Liang Liu

Low-voltage-driven organic phototransistors integrate the photodetector and photomemory functions within one single device to precisely sense the brightness and carry out multilevel memory operations.



2013 ◽  
Vol 138 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sungho Choi ◽  
Byung-Yoon Park ◽  
Sunho Jeong ◽  
Ji-Yoon Lee ◽  
Beyong-Hwan Ryu ◽  
...  


MRS Advances ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (49) ◽  
pp. 2931-2936
Author(s):  
G. Kitahara ◽  
K. Aoshima ◽  
J. Tsutsumi ◽  
H. Minemawari ◽  
S. Arai ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTRecently, an epoch-making printing technology called “SuPR-NaP (Surface Photo-Reactive Nanometal Printing)” that allows easy, high-speed, and large-area manufacturing of ultrafine silver wiring patterns has been developed. Here we demonstrate low-voltage operation of organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) composed of printed source/drain electrodes that are produced by the SuPR-NaP technique. We utilize an ultrathin layer of perfluoropolymer, Cytop, that functions not only as a base layer for producing patterned reactive surface in the SuPR-NaP technique but also as an ultrathin gate dielectric layer of OTFTs. By the use of 22 nm-thick Cytop gate dielectric layer, we successfully operate polycrystalline pentacene OTFTs below 2 V with negligible hysteresis. We also observe the improvement of carrier injection by the surface modification of printed silver electrodes. We discuss that the SuPR-NaP technique allows the production of high-capacitance gate dielectric layers as well as high-resolution printed silver electrodes, which provides promising bases for producing practical active-matrix OTFT backplanes.



2001 ◽  
Vol 686 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michele L. Ostraat ◽  
Jan W. De Blauwe

AbstractA great deal of research interest is being invested in the fabrication and characterization of nanocrystal structures as charge storage memory devices. In these flash memory devices, it is possible to measure threshold voltage shifts due to charge storage of only a few electrons per nanocrystal at room temperature. Although a variety of methods exist to fabricate nanocrystals and to incorporate them into device layers, control over the critical nanocrystal dimensions, tunnel oxide thickness, and interparticle separation and isolation remains difficult to achieve. This control is vital to produce reliable and consistent devices over large wafer areas. To address these control issues, we have developed a novel two-stage ultra clean reactor in which the Si nanocrystals are generated as single crystal, nonagglomerated, spherical aerosol particles from silane decomposition at 950°C at concentrations exceeding 108 cm−3 at sizes below 10 nm. Using existing aerosol instrumentation, it is possible to control the particle size to approximately 10% on diameter. In the second reactor, particles are passivated with a high quality oxide layer with shell thickness controllable from 0.7 to 2.0 nm. The two-stage aerosol reactor is integrated to a 200 mm wafer deposition chamber such that controlled particle densities can be deposited thermophoretically. With nanocrystal deposits of 1013 cm−2, contamination of transition metals and other elements can be controlled to less than 1010 atoms cm−2.We have fabricated 0.2 μm channel length aerosol nanocrystal floating gate memory devices using conventional MOS ULSI processing on 200 mm wafers. The aerosol nanocrystal memory devices exhibit normal transistor characteristics with drive current 30 μA/μm, subthreshold slope 200 mV/dec, and drain induced barrier lowering 100 mV/V, typical values for thick gate dielectric high substrate doped nonvolatile memory devices. Uniform Fowler-Nordheim tunneling is used to program and erase these memory devices. Despite 5 nm tunnel oxides, threshold voltage shifts > 2 V have been achieved with microsecond program and millisecond erase times at moderate operating voltages. The aerosol devices also exhibit excellent endurance cyclability with no window closure observed after 105 cycles. Furthermore, reasonable disturb times and long nonvolatility are obtained, illustrating the inherent advantage of discrete nanocrystal charge storage. No drain disturb was detected even at drain biases of 4V, indicating that little or no charge conduction occurs in the nanocrystal layer. We have demonstrated promise for aerosol nanocrystal memory devices. However, numerous issues exist for the future of nanocrystal devices. These technology issues and challenges will be discussed as directions for future work.



Nanoscale ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (19) ◽  
pp. 8695-8700 ◽  
Author(s):  
Changjian Zhou ◽  
Xinsheng Wang ◽  
Salahuddin Raju ◽  
Ziyuan Lin ◽  
Daniel Villaroman ◽  
...  

Ultra high-k dielectric enables low-voltage enhancement-mode MoS2 transistor with high ON/OFF ratio, leading to low-power device.



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